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Puntius denisonii Hamilton & District Aquarium Society JANUARY 2012
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Hamilton & District J Aquarium Societyhdas.ca/Documents/hdas0112.pdf · 2013. 2. 3. · tank years ago for a saltwater set-up while I was ... classified ad. Since the tank would be

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Page 1: Hamilton & District J Aquarium Societyhdas.ca/Documents/hdas0112.pdf · 2013. 2. 3. · tank years ago for a saltwater set-up while I was ... classified ad. Since the tank would be

Puntius denisonii

Hamilton & DistrictAquarium Society

January 2012

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January 2012

B oard of d irectors

Editor & ExchangEs Jessica Bullock [email protected] (289) 639-3539BrEEdErs awards Charles Drew [email protected] (905) 332-4113

Programs Joe Bastianpillai [email protected] (905) 332-1886mEmBErshiPs Albert Van Mont-

fort298 Hawkridge Ave,Hamilton L9C 3L2

(905) 575-1509

rEfrEshmEnts Sarah Langthorne (905) 575-1236auctionEEr Frank Hyodo (905) 549-7428

LiBrarian Jessica Bullock [email protected] (289) 639-3539auction chairPErson Carla MacDonald [email protected] (905) 515-3771

caoac rEP. Carla MacDonaldSarah Langthorne

[email protected] (905) 515-3771(905) 575-1236

wEBmastEr Ryan Barrett [email protected]

Hamilton & DistrictAquarium Society

P resident

Carla MacDonald [email protected] (905) 515-3771

1st vice P resident

Karen Rogers [email protected]

2 nd vice P resident

Jessica Bullock [email protected]

t reasurer

Albert Van Montfort [email protected] (905) 575-1509

s ecretary

Margaret Dent [email protected] (905) 662-8218

The society meets the second Thursday of each month at 7:30 PM, except in July and August, at the Church of the Resurrection, 435 Mohawk Rd. West near the corner of Garth. Visitors are welcome.

www.hdas.caOur 61st Year of Publication

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Carla's CommentsCarla MacDonald

Hi Everyone!

And so another year has just begun. I hope you all enjoyed the December Christmas party. Thank you all for you contributions to Neighbour to Neighbour. Noel-thank you for your night of trivia. I think it was enjoyed by all.

Our January meeting will be a workshop on preparing food for your fish. It is also the announcement of our elected team at HDAS. It will stand as: Treasurer- Albert V, Secretary- Margaret D, 2nd Vice Pres- Jessica B, 1st Vice Pres- Karen R and Pres- myself. Please remember that we are always looking for volunteers to help out with the club. Let me know if you are interested.

Have you signed up for the Home Show? Our team will be visiting tanks in March to put a presentation together for the April meeting. I can't wait to see all your tanks this year.

Remember to send any fish related articles and pictures to Jessica at the bulletin e-mail address. Frozen ponds make great pictures this time of year!

See you at the meeting Jan 12.

Carla

Table of ContentsCarla's Comments 2

Spawning Super Blue Kerri Tetra 3

Setting up a Reef Tank: Part 1 5

Mesoplodon peruvianus 12

Gallery 15

Odds 'n' Ends 16

Submissions 16

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3January 2012

Spawning the Super Blue Kerri TetraCharles Drew

The Blue Kerri Tetra has been a favorite of mine for many years; I have probably bred hundreds of them. It was first introduced to the hobby by Heiko Blieher in 1977. It has since been a very popular tetra species ever since. It is a great little fish only about one and a half inches in length. As it likes to school it should be kept in groups otherwise it may be shy. They are claimed to have a long life span of up to 10 years. The males are more colourful and have a blue adipose fin while the female's adipose fin is red. They come from the Rio Aripuana in the Amazon. They adapt well to most aquarium water and are happy in water temperatures from the low 70’s to the low 80’s. They are not hard to feed as they accept most frozen and prepared fish foods.

A couple of years ago I became aware of a new and more colourful strain of Kerri Tetras called the Super Blue. When I first saw them I could hardly believe how dark they were. It is possible this is what was referred to in Germany as the Purple Kerri Tetra. At any rate I bought a half a dozen and took them home.

My next step was to breed these little beauties. Of coarse it was not going to be a problem as I had bred many Kerri Tetras before. Well as I found out that every strain of fish can have slight differences that you have to discover and then have to figure out how to over come them. In this case it was very tiny eggs and fry.

Getting the fish to spawn was no problem. Getting a good hatch was no problem. With the other spawns from regular Blue Kerri Tetras as soon as the fry came free swimming I would feed liquid fry food and micro worms for two or three days and then move on to live baby brine shrimp. This did not work with this strain. As soon as I started to feed the shrimp the tank would suddenly cloud slightly and the fry would die sometimes most of them and sometimes all of them. I am sure I was not over feeding and I don’t like to add a sponge filter too soon as it can remove micro organisms that benefit

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the fry. I have finally found the answer and I now feed liquid fry food for a week or more and then add a seeded sponge filter before feeding newly hatched baby brine shrimp. Now that I have them figured out I should be able to have some excellent spawnings in the future.

Available in Europe are Gold Kerri Tetras and the latest is Albino Kerri Tetras. I won’t hold my breath about getting them as the LFS dealers have been promising to get me in the gold ones for at least 10 years now. The Kerri Tetras are a great and colourful addition to any planted aquarium.

After 10 or more years of trying to get Gold Kerri Tetras I thought I had found them, and only a few days after I wrote this article about Super Blue Kerri Tetras. I am still not sure if what I found are the ones that they are calling the Gold Kerri. I was in Big Al’s in Mississauga when what appeared to be a white tetra caught my eye. A closer look and saw that it was a Kerri Tetra that was white with black eyes. That ruled out the possibility that it was the new albino variety. I quickly cornered Ed, one of the fishroom managers, and found that they were on the invoice as Gold Kerri Tetras. I left with 10 and hoped that they would be gold when they got settled into one of my tanks.

To my surprise they are a pretty pastel shade of violet. This leaves me with a question. Are these fish another new colour strain? Are these fish the ones that someone that is much more colour blind than me calling them gold? Never the less I hope to spawn them soon and will have to call them Pastel Kerri Tetras. They are indeed a pretty colour strain. The true gold ones may still be out there.

COUPON:

Please bring this bulletin to Pet Paradise for a 10% discount.2020 Appleby Line, Burlington - (905) 331-7381

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5January 2012

Setting up a Reef Tank: Part 1Marty Ziegler

First published in Gravel Gossip, Diamond State Aquarium Society

Over the past 7 years, I have set up 5 saltwater reef tanks, each one with a different set-up. I’ll start with the oldest tank, since this one has been going for over 5 years and has matured nicely.

For my first reef tank, I chose a 55 gallon Plexiglas tank with a wet-dry trickle filter, a canister filter, and a protein skimmer. I decided not to use any substrate, since I would be loading up this tank with live rock and did not want to have to worry about inaccessible areas where the sand would not be able to be cleaned. I had purchased the tank years ago for a saltwater set-up while I was on the West Coast, but never got it set up before moving back east. I found a used wet-dry trickle filter and a protein skimmer for sale in a local classified ad. Since the tank would be in our family room, the wife decided we needed a nice wooden cabinet for the tank, so we took a trip up to That Fish Place and purchased a new one. While there, I purchased a Fluval 303 canister filter.

Being that the tank was on the 1st floor of the house, I was satisfied that the weight of the tank, rocks, and water would be no problem. We chose the family room, as this is where we spend our evenings and would be able to see the tank every night. The location was not near any heating/cooling vents, outside doors, was across the room from the bay window, and did not get any direct sunlight, except for about an hour in the morning during the winter only.

For lighting, I built a canopy to house two 36 inch Corallife 50/50 tubes with reflectors. Plans were to expand the lighting at a later time, since lighting is one of the most expensive accessories for a reef tank, and I was trying to keep costs to a minimum.

The canister filter, which had three separate containers for filter media, was loaded with a sponge, activated carbon, and bio-balls for biological filtration. The wet-dry trickle filter was loaded with bio-balls and a sponge filter. I hooked up the canister filter and wet-

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dry trickle filter to the tank and the protein skimmer to the sump of the trickle filter. Then I mixed the saltwater up and filled the tank. Now I was ready to turn the pumps on and hope there would be no leaks. Of course, there was a small leak where the tubing meets the return from the canister filter. A little tweaking on the connection and the slow leak stopped. I later found a rubber ring used on the Marineland Magnum filters worked well on these connections and could be purchased in a 6-pack at That Fish Place. This set-up was allowed to run for about a week.

I purchased some live rock from a friend who already had a mature reef tank for a few years. Then I purchased two yellow-tailed damsels to cycle the tank. During the next several weeks, I tested the tank for ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate. Surprisingly, I did not see an ammonia or nitrite spike, probably due to the matured live rock that I obtained from another tank. Slowly, I added several more fish, including a percula clown and several varieties of damsels, a few turbo snails, and a sally lightfoot crab, over the next couple of months. During this period, I started to add some brown mushroom polyps and a couple of feather duster worms.

I kept the pH between 8.0 and 8.2, carbonate hardness between 8.0 and 10.0dkh, the specific gravity at 1.023, and the temperature between 75 and 78 degrees F. Later on, I found I had to add buffer to the system every week or so in order to maintain the pH and hardness within the above ranges.

I fed the fish once a day, using a different food each day, including marine flake, spirulina flake, frozen brine shrimp, and as a treat, some live adult brine shrimp once a week.

Maintenance on this tank included cleaning the front glass of algae once a week, cleaning the skimmer cup once a week, doing a 10% water change every two weeks, rinsing the sponge and changing the activated carbon in the canister filter once a month.

All together, I spent a little over $400 for this set-up. If I had to buy the tank, it would have added about another $75. If you were to buy everything "new", you could very easily top $1000 for this same set-

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www.thetropicalfishroom.ca
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11January 2012

up. I have found it pays to check the classified ads and local bulletin boards for used tanks and accessories. If you have the patience, you can obtain everything you need at a very reasonable price.

During the first year of this tank, the main disadvantage I found was the Plexiglas front was hard to clean the algae off without leaving fine scratches, despite using the so-called "safe for Plexiglas" algae pads. Because of the partially closed in top of the tank, it was difficult to get into the tank during maintenance. The one thing I liked about using a Plexiglas tank was how bright and crystal clear the tank looked when compared to all-glass tanks. Despite that one advantage, this would be the first and last saltwater Plexiglas tank set-up that I would use.

Now with the minimal lighting of this set-up, I am limited to the types of corals I can keep, so the next major expenditure would be for metal halide lamps. But I was already suffering from growing pains and wanted to expand to a larger tank after one year with this set-up. Next month, I’ll write about the expansion from the 55 to a 125-gallon tank and the addition of metal halide lighting.

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January 1992 –President Tom Tota went over some of his pet peeves about the Tropical Fish Hobby. This included the propagation of albino and long-finned variants of our commonly-kept tropical species . Tom also reminded club members about the elections that were happening at that month’s meeting. Articles this month included “Breeding Julidochromis marileri” by Charlie Drew, an article on Electric Catfish by Norm McEvoy, and this interesting (and a little different) article that was a reprint:

Mesoplodon peruvianusAuthor Unknown

On Feburary 2, 1976 James Mead went whale hunting on a sandy stretch of Peruvian beach. As curator of marine mammals at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, he was always on the lookout for interesting specimens, and he had heard that local fishermen who caught whales in their nets often left the animals’ remains along the shore. What Mead found that day however, was not just any specimen but a new species – a whale so elusive that Mead and his colleagues took 15 more years to confirm its existence.

The evidence Mead spotted in 1976 was a badly damaged skull with the characteristic shape of the beaked-whale family , named for its members’ pointed, dolphin-like snouts. It was the smallest beaked whale skull Mead had ever seen. “I was sure it was an undescribed species” he says. But he knew he’d need a more complete specimen to describe it, and so he asked several Peruvian colleagues to keep an eye open for other unusually small beaked-whale skeletons or the whales themselves.

Mead wasn’t holding his breath; beaked whales are notoriously difficult to sight. “They tend to live offshore, in small groups, and they dive deep and stay down a long time – a matter of an hour,” says Mead. “If an animal that has those characteristics

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13January 2012

also doesn’t like boats, you don’t see it.” The 11 specimens Mead and his colleagues eventually found were either trapped in fishermen’s nets or washed up on the beach.

But with those specimens Mead was able to place the whale in the genus Mesoplodon. The different species can be distinguished by variations in the shape and placement of their two teeth, which protrude from the lower jaw like two inverted fangs. The teeth on the whales Mead and his colleagues found don’t resemble those of any other known Mesoplodon species: they stick up perpendicular to the jawbone, rather than pointing forward or backward. And as Mead suspected from the start, the whale he dubbed Mesoplodon peruvianus is smaller than any other beaked whale; the largest adult carcass found so far measures just over 12 feet long.

Taxonomy aside, Mead and his colleagues know very little about their whale. They assume it lives off the Peruvian coast, possibly as far north as Mexico. “But we don’t have any real evidence as to the limits of its range,” he says. “And we don’t have any way of getting information” – short of a few more decades of beachcombing.

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Gallery

15January 2012

Super Blue Kerri, top, Charles DrewKerri Tetra, bottom

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Odds 'n' EndsEvEnts

January 15 CAOAC General Meeting, WaterdownJanuary 15 Giant Auction, Aquarium Society of Winnipeg

February 19 Winter Auction, Tropical Fish Club of Erie County March 25 Spring Auction & Show, Brant Aquarium Society

m EEtings

January 12 DIY Fish Foods

Submissions

Articles are needed for every month's bulletin. Topics can include breeding, nutrition, water quality, do-it-yourself techniques, and amusing anecdotes. We have kicked off a new practice of using a hobbyist's photo for the cover of the e-bulletin. Hobbyist photos are needed for future months' bulletins. They do not need to be show quality fish or professional quality photos. Please send submissions to [email protected]

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